DUBLIN, May 7 (Reuters) - "When I die there will be a final waltz playing in my head," Oscar-winning French composer Maurice Jarre once said, according to several newspapers reporting his death in ...
When Dublin university student Shane Fitzgerald posted a poetic but phony quote on Wikipedia, he was testing how our globalised, increasingly internet-dependent media was upholding accuracy and ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. An Irish student's fake quote on the Wikipedia online encyclopedia has been used in newspaper obituaries around the world, the Irish ...
A 22-year-old Irish college student posted a phony quote on deceased French composer Maurice Jarré’s Wikipedia entry for a sociology project, and inadvertently fooled the world’s media. His academic ...
A 22-year-old student in Dublin, Ireland, recently set up a Wikipedia hoax that led several major United Kingdom news outlets to publish a fake quote after they used the socially-curated encyclopedia ...
I love this story. An Irish university student decided to test whether or not the media are upholding accuracy in the Web 2.0 era. So he posted false information on Wikipedia to see what would happen.
Maurice-Alexis Jarre (13 September 1924 – 28 March 2009) was a French composer and conductor. Although he composed several concert works, Jarre is best known for his film scores, particularly for his ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. An Irish student's fake quote on the Wikipedia online encyclopaedia has been used in newspaper obituaries around the world, the Irish ...
Maurice Jarre, the French-born composer who won Oscars for his powerfully evocative scores for the David Lean epics “Lawrence of Arabia, “Doctor Zhivago and “A Passage to India,” has died. He was 84.
Maurice Jarre, who won three Oscars – all for films by David Lean – was one of the last of the “silver-age” film composers, perhaps best known for scoring large-scale films but equally at home with ...
DUBLIN (Reuters) - "When I die there will be a final waltz playing in my head," Oscar-winning French composer Maurice Jarre once said, according to several newspapers reporting his death in March.
THE cinema, as he remembered it, was off Trafalgar Square. It was small, stuffy and dark. And there, over 40 hours in early 1962, Maurice Jarre watched the first rough cut of David Lean's “Lawrence of ...